- Fed Will Be Best Early-Warnings System

- Earnings Microscope Turns to Supermarket Aisle
- Raiders Rip Cash Machine Out of Bank's Wall
- US Probe Targets UBS Banker Visits: Report
- Rebel Forces Could Create the Return of the I-Bank
- Ericsson Buys Nortel Wireless Units for $1.13 Billion
- Berkshire Hathaway Rallies to 6-Month Closing High
- 30,000 China Steelworkers in Deadly Clash: Report
- Obama Touts Healthcare Plan for Small Businesses
- Fed Will Be Best Early-Warnings System
- Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Rallies to 6-Month Closing High
- Market 360: The Week's Best & Worst
- Hirschhorn: Manage Risk or it Will Manage You
- If FINA Ruling Holds, Business Would Change
- Homeownership Society: All in Good Time
- Compliments, Complaints, and the Obama T-Shirt Mystery
- Art Cashin: Dow 10,000 Possible Near-Term
- When Does Palm Stop Acting As Apple Wanna-be?
- Dunkelberg: 'To Raise the Cost of Labor, What is Congress Thinking?'
- Fed chief: ‘I’m answerable the American people’
- Carbon plan could mean higher utility bills in Mo.
- How to cash in on your old gas guzzler
- Wall Street looking to extend restarted rally
- Farm stands holding steady in Conn.
- Analysis: Highway plan part of economic recovery
- In Hawaii, health insurance paid by employers
- Hard Rock hotel expands as Vegas rates stay down
- Richest woman's 'visions' claim amuses Israelis
SEOUL, South Korea - Samsung Electronics Co., the world's biggest maker of computer memory chips, said second-quarter net profit rose 5.2 percent while rival Hynix reported a narrower loss as the chip industry emerges from a deep slump.
Samsung, also the world's biggest manufacturer of flat screen televisions, earned 2.25 trillion won ($1.81 billion) in the three months ended June 30, it said in a regulatory filing Friday. The company posted net profit of 2.14 trillion won a year earlier.
Its results were underpinned by growth in sales of flat screen TVs and mobile phones as well as better prices for memory chips amid stronger demand for personal computers.
Separately, Hynix Semiconductor Inc., the world's second-largest manufacturer of memory chips after Samsung, said its second quarter net loss narrowed to 58 billion won from red ink of 711 billion won the year before. The result was its seventh straight net loss. Sales fell 10 percent to 1.68 trillion won.
The results add to signs that the global chip industry is recovering from a lengthy downturn when a supply glut suppressed prices. For Samsung, the profit was its best since the fourth quarter of 2006 and comes after earnings stalled in recent quarters amid the global recession. Net profit fell sharply in the first quarter and the company reported its first ever quarterly loss in the final three months of last year.
Samsung's sales during the quarter rose 15.9 percent to 21.02 trillion won from 18.14 trillion won a year earlier.
"Samsung achieved outstanding results in the second quarter with our consumer electronics business remaining strong and a solid performance in the still challenging components market," Samsung Vice President Robert Yi said in a press release.
The stronger Samsung result came as two other major South Korean companies — LG Electronics Inc. and Hyundai Motor Co. — announced record quarterly profits this week. And in a sign of improvement in South Korea's economy, the Bank of Korea said Friday that gross domestic product expanded 2.3 percent in the second quarter from the first, the biggest gain in 5 1/2 years amid sharp increases in manufacturing and exports.
Samsung, also the world's second-biggest producer of mobile phones after Nokia Corp. of Finland, said that it sold 52.3 million handsets in the second quarter, up 14 percent from the year before, and that prices increased.
Suwon, South Korea-based Samsung said it expects demand for mobile phones to increase in the third quarter and forecast it would exceed its full-year sales target of 200 million phones.
Shares in Samsung rose 0.7 percent to close at 683,000 won. Hynix shares fell 0.3 percent to finish at 16,350 won.




